| brian carroll on 10 Mar 2001 20:47:37 -0000 |
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| [Nettime-bold] re: copy=right |
copyright issues made it to my radar screen after receiving
an overview of the issues in a content development course i
am now taking. the teacher has a background in publishing
and has given a literal perspective of what _could_ happen
if copyright were to be enforced online. the short of it,
from my view, is that it would stop all discourse instantly.
no forwarded news articles. no posting of articles without
either permission or licensing, and _no_archives_ of any
of these sources of information. it made me think of two
mailing lists i maintain in which i have forwarded many
news articles, under the premise of fair-use, but which
are semi-permanently archived online as a resource, and
also the recent issue regarding the nettime archives,
and the publishing of ideas from the archive. what seems
likely, given copyright, is that, if the worst case does
happen, that mailing list archives would need to be swept
clean of all copyright infringing materials, even if first
sent under fair-use, because an archive is a permanent
collection of a work or works. routine, the teacher said,
for companies to keyword-search the internet for their
names, images, and branding, as to find violators and
fetch the lawyers on them with a form letter.
what made me especially concerned, having never considered
it before, was libel and slander in this regard. while
free speech is a right, defending against misrepresentation
or 'damaging free speech' (yelling 'fire' in a crowded movie
theater) can be grounds for lawsuits and compensation.
never having thought of it this way before, i now believe
that a possible tactic of information warfare in the
cultural/social sphere will be challenges of the control
of certain kinds of information. not for monetary reasons
as much as for political reasons, with copyright as the
protector. (nothing new- but...) for example, back to
the idea of large businesses which may have commercial
interests which could/are damaging the public interest,
and statements to that affect are stated online in a
public forum such as nettime- and then the lawyers for
the company come sniffing at websites and probing for
details, watching it unfold, until they send the big
legalese document stating that 'on such and such dates
you have committed libel (text-based badness) against
so-and-so company' and demand monetary compensation
for the damage of the company's reputation, et cetera.
i don't think this is an unrealistic future, given the
way the web as privatized and copyrighted realm is now
playing out in the niches of industry. what is a person
going to do when a billion dollar company sues for
libel on a mailing list, and, for damages for each
offense, based on the size of subscriptions and the
impossibility to retract the statement, as it will
always be in the public domain (since e-mails and
mailing-list archives cannot stop the flow of the
info from getting out and about)...
copyright, at least in terms of the battle of ideas
and the redefinition of reality from the privatized
marketplace to more free, public, and democratic
discourse, will be one area where the forces of
opposing sides will face each other face to face,
ultimately in an offline, courtroom, context.
for example, what if someone gets 'picked off' a
mailing-list and their words become hot enough in
terms of offense and danger to a corporation's or
institution's interests, and these nearly real-
time discourses become highly-charged, hyper-
reviewed/surveilled forums for mischaracterization
and whatnot, to the effect that saying anything at
all, with respect to copyright (of identity of a
copyright holder) crosses over into libel, from
their perspective? to me this is a different
scenario than posting songs or information on
a website, but the very act of speaking/saying/
writing in text, ideas, and having these ideas
become the focus of enforcement. not sure about
others, but words flow out of my fingers, the
fuse of nerves degaussing brainspace as symbols
and signs break their way from intangible blips
to rhythmic letters, one another another, possibly
the only real freedom between inner and outer
worlds, as if there were such a differentiation,
as if it were not metaphysically so.
copyright in the print world explains a few things
to me regarding my logfiles. most of my written works
contain a lot of fair-use of copyrights, and at times
the mention of lots of different players in industry.
the fact that representatives for these players show
up in webstatistics is not unusual, most of the time.
but i never figured that major publishing houses were
reviewing my written works for copyright infringement.
but when lots law firms keep showing up, at the same
time as other players, say, major pharmaceutical
companies after posting about the corruption of the
mental health industry as a mechanism of intellectual
oppression, it has me wondering if, someday hence, a
battle will be played out within the words (and ideas)
that are being typed daily, and in the archives that
pre-exist awareness of the traditional rules of the
game. for myself, i see this is as a great Opportunity
for discourse between battling sides, and, oh cliche,
in a `win-win' kind-of-way- as it may be the only
Public Discourse between players that can occur,
given the traditional control over information, its
presentation, and interpretation by institutions
that legitimize a certain way of seeing/understanding
a shared/public reality, per se.
thus, libel (written badness) & slander (spoken badness)
may become the tactic for strategic discourse. strategic
in the Cold War sense, being able to lob an idea into
the opposing camp and make it hurt enough for massive
retaliation in the MAD sense (Mutually Assured Destruction)
and even the NUTs sense (Nuclear Usability Tactics) for
lower-yield ideas ready for intellectual property battles.
Getting lawyers and groups into a courtroom, from an
internet public forum, could be quite exciting and a
way to make change in such a place as is the hyperabsurd
online realm today.
scariest, would be beyond libel or slander, but into
sedition, which my Webster's Dictionary (TM) defines as
"the inciting of hostility against the government, likely
to cause rebellion or insurrection, but not amounting to
treason." what is the limit to the critique and dissent
of government, vis-a-vis free speech/expression, and at
what point will people online, saying their piece, be
held responsible for seditious acts against established
governmental powers, when those governments no longer
represent public, democratic interests, but only mimic,
like a marionette, the act? while government information
that is in the public domain, and is thus copyright free
(at least it seems that is the case), what happens when
that information because so opposite to the reality of
the world outside of the bureaucracies, that it becomes
'hostile information' and a danger to the workings of
the state, democratic or not? free speech is an ideology,
as long as it is 'good' or 'true' free speech, fuzzy-
logic-like. what if, given copyright, and the rights
of governments to protect the masses from things that
will both hurt the government and the status quo that
believes in the current system (as the best of all
possible worlds)... seems like a showdown waiting to
happen in many regards, if only on a sublime level.
the teacher for my class has an interesting premise-
that everything is e-commerce. that is, that everything
online is selling something, whether for money or not.
i tend to agree, in the sense of exchange. but myself
would dissociate the monetary aspects pre-ordained to
e-commerce from the ideas that are being sold, for no
money, and call these instead I-COMMERCE: the selling
and-or exchange of ideas. crass as it may sound, it
seems that the only way to 'compete' on a cultural
slash social level is to use the techniques that do
work in a capitalistic society, and use these for
non-monetary ends. but everyone smells snake-oil
in any effort to do anything- why trust anyone in
this day-and-age? it is the D.I.Y. culture. which,
in `my (public) book,' can be equated with the same
anti-productive aspects of copyright law- that is,
that Yourself always precedes Ourselves, and that
the Individual is still the "King|Queen" of this
shit-mound we call Earth. wondering, why can't we
work together on projects bigger than our private
works, so that we can have a larger voice? because
of the logic underlying DIY cult/ure... those who
can do it themselves are often have better oddds,
by birthright or whatnot, to make a niche-market
for their ideas, be it in academia, industry, and-
or `The Cultural Enterprise', that corporate, cum
art, institution that is art in its e-commercial
way. [no judgement call, just a reality check].
thus, copyright and DIY culture enforces the status
quo by being of a fragmented and privately-based/
biased organizational structure wherein the value
is in differentiation and outsider/insider status.
most everything in this realm is privatized, in an
end-run kind-of-way, if only for ideological reasons
of historical and hysterical interpretation. this
is the base camp of the logic of either you or me.
the idea of an idea-commerce of the public we, the
human beings (not as absolute, but as vanguard of
issues that affect the greatest definable public
sphere on the globe, or on a mailing list) can go
where DIY cultural political-economy cannot, and
that is, extro- and intro- commercial, that great
grey area and-or colored spectrum of the paradox
and contradictory confusion of the real world as
it exists, not as it is simply dreamed to be, so
as to not have to deal with the messy complexity
of Big Ideas. the corporate and-or commercial is
not inherently anti-this or anti-public, we make
it so. human beings do. wo|men do. public and the
private of individuals and groups PREDICATE the
situation we face. for example, went to get food
at a grocery store. locking up recumbent bicycle
as old man confronts me. Starts querying me on
my beliefs on guns. old soldier, charleton heston
(movie star, National Gun Association poster-GOD)
believer, etc. beyond the discourse, which was
in total opposition, although we have the same
ends, our means to an end do not meet in the
DIY culture, as meaning and purpose and belief
and agreement are in contest, not cooperation.
in the end, i may be staring at my enemy, some-
one whom fought for the U.S. in wartime, and
probably has many a tragedy and sorrow to
carry on to his death, but ultimately if the
2nd Amendment to the US Constitution becomes
a person's only issue, and, say, a cultural
slash social 'uprising' (as in non-violent,
but culturally and institutionally disruptive
events) do/es happen, then, if people are
people, and react, this type of person could
end up shooting the people whom are trying
to make the DIY change, as it is person-vs-
person, or spy-vs-spy in this MAD/NUTs world.
what about D.I.O., do-it-ourselves, in the
sense of public, or mini-publics, which the
DIY seems to be about, but is not constituted
on a both-and basis for common human initiatives.
while people may like Greenpeace or the Sierra
Club or whatnot, they might not wholly agree
with their political-economic functions. and
ideologically, it is idea-commerce in a copy-
right kind-of-way, when private aspects also
mingle with public aspects (inevitable) but
also when 'politics as usual' affects the
bureaucracy, not matter how well intentioned.
defining a shared public sphere, between
industry and individuals, based on a common
human constitution, would/could enable a way
to reprogram existing entities, and change
the rules of the game enough so, that these
same groups in opposition could transmute
themselves into groups in cooperation for
shared public goals. Amazon Forest and the
Human tactic are a great example of when
such an idea is only a facade, like a front-
company for a clandestine organization and
its agenda. that is exactly what is going on
today, within every discourse and every action
which is trying to breach the established order
of things. it is not going to happen within a
culture of business as usual, but only within
a culture of business as unusual, as changed,
as reinterpreted, as reconstituted, and as
reevaluated with regard to leveling the playing
field, not by affirmation of beliefs, but by
structural change of the System of Operation.
the Operating Situation that d-evolves will
reframe ideas like "fair-use" from its present
place in the danger-zone of ideas, and into one
that has substantial grounding. there is a war,
a cultur/al war going on now, and it is every-
one against everyone else. we're all going to
end up with no-rights, if only because of the
stubborn need to sustain the egotistical id's
and the effluent (pouring out of ideas and)
ideologies based upon a pre-ordained and pre-
supposed meaning in private individualistic
acts, with basis in the inherent worth/value
of individual Copyright of (Public) Reality,
and pre-supposed, competitive worth in the
realm-of-ideas, where dime-a-dozen goes into
micropayment-schemes online. how libertarian.
Fair-Use may be a vital battleground for this
war, as idea-commerce wars with e-commercialism
for the right for public and free expressions,
for educational reasons and for `the advancement
of human knowledge', which copyright is said to
exist to protect, not to extinguish.
"And the Internet Said: Let the Games Begin!"
[from: Arpanet, A Doctrine of Cold War Logic]
human being #2,344,928,002
www.architexturez.com/site
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